A group of economic experts under the aegis of
Nigerian Economic
Society (NES) on Monday called on President Muhammadu
Buhari to assemble a team of versatile economists who are vast in policy
formulation and implementation, to tackle poverty and unemployment currently ravaging
the country.
NES, which made the call in Abuja while briefing the
press ahead of its
60th annual conference slated for September 16,
2019, also noted that it was high time ministers, judicial officers, National
Assembly members and other government functionaries came together to find lasting
solution to varying degrees of challenges facing the country.
The President of NES, Prof. Tamunopriye Agioberebo,
who was represented at the briefing by a member and lecturer at the University
of Abuja, Prof. Sarah Anyanwu, expressed the concern of the members about the
increasing poverty and unemployment rate in Africa.
Agioberebo explained that the conference with the
theme: ‘Economic
Policies and Quality of Life in Africa’, has been
structured in a way that would proffer solutions to numerous challenges facing
African countries, particularly Nigeria.
He expressed concerns on how quality of life has
been a mirage in most
African countries, saying: “The burgeoning rate of
unemployment corroborates the argument of an existence of huge and significant
disconnect between the growth rate of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita
and the quality of life indicators.”
According to him, “The country’s low life
expectancy at birth, which averaged a mere 53 years; low adult literacy rate,
which averaged 66.9 per cent between 2010 and 2017, high and disturbing rising
incidence of poverty which averaged about 77.6 per cent between 2010 and 2017,
the burgeoning rate of unemployment, all largely serve to corroborate the argument
of an existence of huge and significant disconnect between the growth rate of
GDP per capita and the quality of life indicators.
“It is now 60 years since the first annual conference
of the Nigerian Economic Society, and with the African Development Bank’s renewed
interest in rekindling the theoretical and empirical discourse on Quality of
Life indicators, coupled with the bank’s renewed interest in the practice of
using Quality of Life indicators to evaluate the socio-economic outcomes of
developmental policies, it is expected that the quality of life of the Africa
people would improve.”
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